AIDS in the Heartland

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Bol Histories of AIDS in the United States typically consider San Francisco and New York the epicenters of the crisis. The Midwest, if considered at all, appears as a footnote to the social, medical, and political struggles of coastal queer communities. But the US heartland cultivated its own regionally distinct strategies of survival that became the surprising and lasting blueprint for LGBTQ politics today. Unearthing this complex story, health activism expert Katie Batza masterfully illustrates the diversity, resilience, innovation, and influence of the Midwest's response to the AIDS epidemic. Though AIDS cases were relatively low, the conservative political and religious landscape, lack of medical infrastructure, and diffuse gay communities brought Midwesterners together in unexpected ways. Weaving compelling oral histories with remarkable archival research, Batza sheds light on the moving stories of a constellation of essential responders that included crop duster pilots, church van drivers, nuns, tribal leaders, and synagogue ladies in decommissioned convents, backyard barbeques, high school gyms, and city parks. These unique collaborations fostered loud, radical queer politics and homonormative strategies alike, but the myth of a homogenously white, Christian, and heterosexual heartland endured. In AIDS in the Heartland, Batza contends that the respectability and palatability of the heart of the nation prevail as core values in national LGBTQ political strategies today. Just as in the heart of the nation, Batza contends, respectability and palatability prevail as core values in national LGBTQ political strategies today.

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Bol

Histories of AIDS in the United States typically consider San Francisco and New York the epicenters of the crisis. The Midwest, if considered at all, appears as a footnote to the social, medical, and political struggles of coastal queer communities. But the US heartland cultivated its own regionally distinct strategies of survival that became the surprising and lasting blueprint for LGBTQ politics today. Unearthing this complex story, health activism expert Katie Batza masterfully illustrates the diversity, resilience, innovation, and influence of the Midwest's response to the AIDS epidemic. Though AIDS cases were relatively low, the conservative political and religious landscape, lack of medical infrastructure, and diffuse gay communities brought Midwesterners together in unexpected ways. Weaving compelling oral histories with remarkable archival research, Batza sheds light on the moving stories of a constellation of essential responders that included crop duster pilots, church van drivers, nuns, tribal leaders, and synagogue ladies in decommissioned convents, backyard barbeques, high school gyms, and city parks. These unique collaborations fostered loud, radical queer politics and homonormative strategies alike, but the myth of a homogenously white, Christian, and heterosexual heartland endured. In AIDS in the Heartland, Batza contends that the respectability and palatability of the heart of the nation prevail as core values in national LGBTQ political strategies today. Just as in the heart of the nation, Batza contends, respectability and palatability prevail as core values in national LGBTQ political strategies today.

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Pagina's: 184, Paperback, The University of North Carolina Press


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Merk University of North Carolina Press
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  • 9781469690490
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